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NOVEMBER 21, 2018 / 5:10 pm
S&P 500 gains with energy, tech but ends near day's low
DJ: 24,464.69 -0.95 NAS: 6,972.25 +63.43 S&P: 2,649.93
+8.04 11/21
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The
S&P 500 ended higher on Wednesday after a brutal two-day selloff, led by a rebound
in energy and technology shares, but the market faltered toward the session’s
end as Apple shares surrendered gains ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday. The Dow also gave up its gains to end flat,
while the S&P 500 ended near its session lows, a sign of lingering
bearishness.
Worries about slowing
global growth and peaking corporate earnings have sapped risk appetite in recent months, throwing into doubt
the longevity of the decade-old bull run for stocks. Michael Antonelli, managing director of institutional
sales trading at Robert W. Baird in Milwaukee, said the late-day weakness,
which was likely tied to program selling in thin trading volume, is a
disappointment for the bulls. “It’s ugly end-price action.
There’s no way to say it otherwise,” he said. “Everybody’s watching Apple because it’s been one of the
drivers of pain. It opened really strong and to give all of that back just
means the pain is not over.”
Though the S&P technology index rose 0.6 percent, helped by
a 9.7 percent gain in shares of Autodesk Inc, Apple shares ended down 0.1
percent at $176.78 after trading as high as $180.27 during the session. software company Autodesk reported
third-quarter results above analysts’ estimates and announced an $875 million
deal to buy cloud-based software company PlanGrid. The S&P energy index rose 1.6 percent as oil prices
steadied after a 6 percent plunge on Tuesday.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average ended flat at 24,464.69, the S&P 500 gained 8.04 points, or 0.30
percent, to 2,649.93 and the Nasdaq Composite added 63.43 points, or 0.92
percent, to 6,972.25. The Dow and
S&P 500 remain in negative territory for the year.
The Cboe Volatility Index, the most widely followed
barometer of expected near-term volatility for the S&P 500, was down 1.68 points at
20.8. Traders in the options market expect stocks to remain volatile in coming
weeks. [nL4N1XV4O2
Volume was light at about
6.5 billion shares. That
compares with the 8.5 billion daily average for the past 20 trading days. “It’s a cautious, measured recovery to recapture some of
the lost share price from the past few days,” said John Carey, managing
director and portfolio manager at Amundi Pioneer Asset Management in Boston. “Oil is a big part of it ... It’s brought about an improvement in
cyclical stocks,” Carey said, referring to gains in shares of energy and
materials companies.
Retailers also recovered, with the S&P retail index ending up
1.1 percent, breaking an
eight-session string of losses. Foot Locker Inc surged 14.9
percent after the footwear retailer’s quarterly same-store sales trumped
expectations and boosted other sports retailers.
Shares of Dick’s Sporting Goods Inc, Hibbett Sports Inc and Nike
Inc, a Foot Locker supplier, all gained.
Gap Inc rose 4.7
percent after several Wall Street brokerages took positively to Chief Executive
Arthur Peck’s more aggressive plan to close underperforming stores, which is
expected to eliminate significant losses.
Gains in Foot Locker and Gap helped push the S&P consumer
discretionary index 1 percent higher.
A report by capital markets-focused MNI
saying the Federal Reserve
may pause its interest rate-hiking cycle
as early as spring may have helped to support the market, some strategists said.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a
2.77-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.91-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted six new 52-week highs
and three new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 14 new highs and 84 new
lows.
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